Charles Petzold



Matinées with Mom

August 20, 2021
Roscoe, N.Y.

In early 1977, I had been living in New York City for about a year and a half, and working at New York Life Insurance Company, when I complained to my workmate Michele Singer about not being able to think of a birthday gift for my mother. “Why don’t you take her out to a Broadway show?” she brilliantly suggested. “Huh!” I probably replied.

Going to a Broadway show was not uncommon in my family. From my mother’s house in Jersey to midtown Manhattan was only about a 45-minute drive or bus ride. In the spring of 1951 (before I was born), my parents saw South Pacific with Mary Martin and Ray Middleton; in 1958 it was The Music Man with Robert Preston and Barbara Cook; and in 1960, it was Maurice Evans in Tenderloin, a musical comedy about 1890s sex workers in New York City. The soundtrack albums for these shows and many other classics of American Musical Theater contributed to the sounds of my youth. (“Reform, reform, whenever it’s getting warm,” the chorus of sex workers sang in Tenderloin, “we hide inside our rooms and count to ten. Then hit the streets again.”)

In my teens (and after my father died), my family (and usually another family) would occasionally go into the city and see shows such as Oliver!, Man of La Mancha, and Jesus Christ Superstar. In 1968 (when I was 15), my mother and I went just by ourselves to see The Happy Time with Robert Goulet and David Wayne.

But taking my mother to a show to celebrate her birthday was a new experience., and it got to be something of a tradition: A tradition that lasted for 43 years.

While clearing out my mother’s house after her death, my brother and sister found a box filled with playbills, and I was able to assemble the following list of (mostly) Broadway shows that I took my mother to, mostly as birthday presents, but other times as well:

  • February 1977: Shenendoah with William Chapman
  • April 1977: American Ballet Theatre with Mikhail Baryshnikov
  • March 1978: On the Twentieth Century with Madeline Kahn, John Cullum, Imogene Coca, and Kevin Kline
  • September 1978: The King and I with Yul Brynner and Constance Towers
  • March 1979: Sweeney Todd with Len Cariou and Angela Lansbury
  • Playbill for Sweeney Todd

  • August 1979: Annie with Sarah Jessica Parker and Alice Ghostley
  • February 1980: West Side Story with Stephen Bogardus, Jossie de Guzman, and Debbie Allen
  • August 1980: Camelot with Richard Burton, Christine Ebersole, and Richard Muenz
  • February 1981: The Pirates of Penzance with Linda Ronstadt, Kevin Kline, and Estelle Parsons
  • March 1982: Deathtrap with Farley Granger and Marian Seldes
  • March 1983: A Chorus Line
  • May 1983: Showboat with Donald O’Connor and Lonette McKee
  • March 1984: My One And Only with Twiggy and Tommy Tune
  • March 1985: Sunday in the Park with George with Robert Westenberg and Mayann Plunkett
  • March 1986: Big River with Daniel Jenkins and Larry Riley, based on Huckleberry Finn
  • March 1987: Cats
  • March 1988: Anything Goes with Patti LuPone; music and lyrics by Cole Porter
  • Mary 1989: Into the Woods with Chip Zien and Cynthia Sikes
  • April 1990: Gypsy with Tyne Daly and Jonathan Hadary
  • Playbill for Gypsy

  • April 1991: Grand Hotel: The Musical
  • April 1992: The Will Rogers Follies with Keith Carradine
  • June 1993: Les Misérables
  • July 1993: Guys and Dolls with Faith Prince and Jonathan Hadary
  • February 1994: Carousel with Sally Murphy, Michael Hayden, and Audra Ann McDonald
  • July 1995: The Phantom of the Opera with Davis Gaines and Tracy Shayne
  • March 1996: Victor Victoria with Julie Andrews and Tony Roberts
  • Playbill for Victor Victoria

  • March 1997: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum with Whoopi Goldberg
  • May 1998: Ragtime: The Musical with Brian Stokes Mitchell and Audra McDonald
  • May 1999: The Phantom of the Opera with Hugh Panaro and Sandra Joseph
  • April 2000: Chicago with Charlotte d’Amboise
  • March 2001: Annie Get Your Gun with Reba McEntire
  • May 2002: Oklahoma with Patrick Wilson, Josefina Gabrielle, Patrick Wilson, and Aasif Mandvi
  • March 2003: The Producers with Brad Oscar and Roger Bart
  • May 2004: Hairspray with Kathy Brier and Harvey Fierstein
  • February 2005: Fiddler on the Roof with Harvey Fierstein
  • March 2006: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels with Jonathan Pryce
  • April 2007: The Drowsy Chaperone
  • April 2008: Curtains with David Hyde Pierce and Debra Monk
  • April 2009: South Pacific with Laura Osnes and David Pittsinger (and Sean Cullen)
  • March 2010: A Little Night Music with Catherine Zeta-Jones and Angela Lansbury
  • March 2011: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying with Daniel Radcliffe and John Larroquette
  • Playbill for How to Succeed

  • April 2011: Anything Goes with Sutton Foster and Joel Grey; music and lyrics by Cole Porter
  • March 2012: Jersey Boys
  • March 2013: Nice Work if You Can Get It with Matthew Broderick, Kelli O’Hara, and Gershwin songs
  • March 2014: Rould Dahl’s Matilda: The Musical with music and lyrics by Tim Minchin
  • March 2015: Cabaret with Alan Cumming and Sienna Miller
  • April 2016: An American in Paris with music and lyrics by George and Ira Gershwin
  • March 2017: Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812 with Denée Benton and Josh Groban, based on War and Peace
  • March 2018: Carousel with Joshua Henry, Jessie Mueller, and Renée Fleming
  • April 2019: My Fair Lady with Laura Benanti and Harry Hadden-Paton
  • In 1999, my then girlfriend Deirdre began accompanying us, and that continued through our engagement and marriage. In 2009, we saw South Pacific at Lincoln Center, where the role of Cmdr. William Harbison was played by Sean Cullen, who had worked with Deirdre during her theater days about two decades previously. Afterwards, he took us backstage, autographed my mother’s program, and planted a thrilling kiss on her cheek.

    In the later years, as my mother’s eyesight had worsened, I would try to get front-row seats, which were exciting for us as well as for her. We had front-row seats for the March 25, 2020, matinée of Wicked, but that was cancelled, of course, and my money promptly refunded.

    Unbeknownst to my mother, I had also planned our 2021 outing. In September 2019, tickets went on sale a year in advance of the opening for a new production of The Music Man starring Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster. Since my parents had seen the original production 60 years earlier, I thought she would enjoy that, so I coughed up a painful $1545 for three front-row seats for a February 2021 matinée.

    Had there been no COVID, my mother would have been able to see that. She died about a month later. But by that time, the opening of The Music Man had been bumped to the spring of 2021 (with our performance scheduled for September 25, 2021), and then it was bumped again. Previews are now scheduled to start in December.

    As of the time of this writing, Deirdre and I have three tickets for what I can only regard as the tentative matinée performance of The Music Man on June 11, 2022, which will be almost three years after I purchased them.

    Whether Deirdre and I will see this or not, we’re not sure. Going by ourselves, it just wouldn’t feel the same.